Weekly Update-Dark and light phases-Phasescape @Crane Arts Grey Area

With magical treasure maps, Stonehenge-like plinths and allusions to complex non-verbal systems, PHASEscape, a spare show of mostly abstract works, suggests a place out of time.

PHASEscape installation at Crane Arts' Grey Area

The sculpture, video, prints and paintings — few in number but several with large impact — occupy the Crane Arts’ Grey Area. This is a cave-like space with smoky grey walls, shade-covered windows and a bare minimum of light aimed at the works. Some art will wither here, but most of the works on view by four Tyler MFA candidates and one recent grad are primal in nature and shamanistic, so they inhabit the hyper-dramatic room with ease.

Samantha Jones' plinths in a circle

In the middle of the room, like the brightest star in the galaxy, is Samantha Jones‘ installation of tall nobly and hairy white plinths arranged together in a close circle. Skinny as camel legs and topped with what appear to be perhaps tiny towns for even tinier people, the grouping is Stonehenge-weird. It casts deep shadows, and as if to magnify its mystery and power, it has, hanging above it, a shiny reflective orb that hovers like the mothership in the movie Close Encounters and reflects the piece back as additional eerie spots of white light. Whatever this is about, the piece is captivating, from the shadows to the hovering orb to the nobbly white surfaces that look like curdled white cake icing (probably plaster or resin).

Craig Rempfer, acrylic and mixed media. Image from artist's website

Nearby and seemingly in conversation with Jones’ piece, are three mixed-media paintings by Craig Rempfer that are full of beauty and ornate graphic moves. Like wild style graffiti as if practiced by the Mayans, Rempfer draws shapes and objects that are biomorphic and lines and shapes that repeat in an obsessive and almost ritualistic way. One black, white and grey work in which lines radiate out from a central knot and an “x” seems to mark the spot could be a treasure map — or a warning map. Rempfer’s smaller turquoise, grey and black painting also uses an “x” motif but evokes the mapping of cell division in a petri dish rather than geographical mapping. These works have aboriginal energy and authority.

Erica Prince's dark diptych fades into the dark wall behind it.

Erica Prince’s diptych painting involves two cartoon-like kidney shaped windows on boxes. One kidney is white like an egg and the other looks transparent and shows a large number of the same boxes and same kidney shapes inside. Is the white kidney an egg, something innocent and pure, and the transparent kidney the mature, non-innocent and noisy and cluttered version? Whatever the meaning, the piece, with its cartoon affect, seems wrong for this show, as if a Tom and Jerry cartoon had invaded.

Johnny Plastini, intaglio

On the other hand, Johnny Plastini‘s large intaglio print, which looks a little like a barn on its side with its roof sliced off, is a mystery that goes well. Titled “Gothic Cab Drivers,” the piece, with three dark, hard-edged shapes separated by lots of white space, has little that’s Gothic and even less that’s taxi like. But there is great tension between the shapes and even greater mystery in some repeated white embossed dots that cut like bullet holes into each shape. The piece feels off-balance in an interesting way, and while it hardly seems playful, the work is a pre-verbal puzzle that is interesting to wonder about.

Devin Kovach's video which animates a building site with graphic overlays of lines

Devin Kovach’s video projection of a building under construction washes the room in pale moving light, and its audio of organ music casts a somber mood over everything. I wanted to be intrigued but this video and the photos of roughly the same subject don’t go far enough to be more than images of building construction sites.

While dramatic, this is a quiet show that grew on me the longer I stayed in the dark room. Some of the work would do well in the stronger light of day (or in a bright gallery) and some would be lessened (Jones’ work in particular). So, see the show here as an example of work that shines in a dark space. More photos at flickr. Read this at Philly Weekly.